Enlarged from the frontispiece, the relatively crude metal cut of Hoe's web perfecting press, the latest and fastest printing technology, serves as frontispiece to a catalogue of mostly histo
Creative Commons LicenseJeremy Norman Collection of Images - Creative Commons

Enlarged from the frontispiece, the relatively crude metal cut of Hoe's web perfecting press, the latest and fastest printing technology, served as frontispiece to a catalogue of mostly historical literature on printing.

Enlargement of Hoe's presentation inscription to Barrows.
Creative Commons LicenseJeremy Norman Collection of Images - Creative Commons

Enlargement of Hoe's presentation inscription to Barrows.

Title page of the auction catalogue of Richard Hoe

Title page of the auction catalogue of Richard Hoe's library, sold the year after his death.

Detail map of London, England, United Kingdom,Brooklyn, New York, United States

A: London, England, United Kingdom, B: Brooklyn, New York, United States

Edward Bigmore Compiles a Catalogue of the Printing Library of Richard March Hoe

1877
Title page and frontispiece of Richard Hoe's catalogue of his library on the history of printing
Creative Commons LicenseJeremy Norman Collection of Images - Creative Commons

In 1877 American printing press inventor and manufacturer Richard March Hoe published The Literature of Printing. A Catalogue of the Library Illustrative of the History and Art of Typography Chalcography and Lithography.  A New Yorker, Hoe had this catalogue privately printed on handmade paper at the Chiswick Press in London in a small, but unspecified number of copies. Its only illustration was a frontispiece showing Hoe's high speed web perfecting press--the latest and greatest in printing technology. According to the Catalogue of the William Blades Library (1899) this catalogue was compiled by bibliographer and antiquarian bookseller Edward C. Bigmore, co-author of the Bigmore and Wyman, A Bibliography of Printing (1880-1886).  

Hoe's catalogue was preceded by two years by another bibliography on the history of printing limited to books in English: John F. Marthens, Typographical Bibliography: A List of Books in the English Language on Printing and its Accessories. Pittsburgh: Printed by Bakewell & Marthens, 1875.  

That Hoe, an American at the center of the American printing industry, chose to have the catalogue of his private library on the history and technique of printing published in London in 1877 rather than by a fine printer in America leads me to believe that he was motivated by the Caxton Quadricentennial Celebration, and its catalogue, which occurred in London in that year. Hoe's name appears on the list of the General Committee for the celebration printed on p. xvii of the celebration catalogue. Because of this, I think we might reasonably speculate that Hoe wanted to show some of his fellow printing history enthusiasts in England the treasures that he had gathered in America on the history of the subjects. Whatever Hoe's motivation, his catalogue was the first American bibliography on the history of printing and typography.

My copy of Hoe's catalogue has Hoe's signed inscription to the American minister, journalist and politician Rev. Samuel J. Barrows, who had worked for Richard Hoe as a very young man. In skimming through the contents of the catalogue I was intrigued that Hoe owned a copy of Freylinghausen (1804). The catalogue noted that this was the "first stereotyped book." This statement was not strictly correct, but it was the first book printed by the Stanhope stereotype process; it was also the first book printed on machine-made paper, a little-known detail that would have been unknown to Hoe.

Hoe died in 1886. In January 1887, ten years after Hoe's catalogue was published, his library was dispersed at auction in New York by Bangs & Co. The first 1433 lots consisted of Hoe's library on the history of printing; the remainder of the roughly 2000 lots included miscellaneous subjects.

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